Ben McLemore's former AAU coach said he is scheduled to meet with a representative of the NCAA's enforcement staff today, when he says he will detail his knowledge of a sports agent's involvement with the former Kansas star.

Darius Cobb, who coached McLemore in AAU basketball since he was at least 15 years old, said that representatives from the University of Kansas are expected to be in his meeting with Elizabeth Ramsey, an NCAA assistant director of enforcement.

Cobb told USA TODAY Sports that he accepted more than $10,000 in cash, lodging, meals and trips from Rodney Blackstock, a middle man who courted McLemore on behalf of sports agents and financial advisers during the 2012-13 college basketball season. Blackstock is now a certified sports agent, according to a spokeswoman at the National Basketball Players' Association.

A St. Louis-based AAU coach, Cobb said that he accepted two cash payments of $5,000 during the regular season from Blackstock, the founder and CEO of Hooplife Academy, a sports mentoring organization based in Greensboro, N.C.

Cobb also said he received three all-expense paid trips to Los Angeles – and that a cousin of McLemore's, Richard Boyd, accompanied him on two of them – for meetings in January and February with sports agents and financial advisers hoping to represent McLemore if he left for the NBA after his redshirt freshman season at Kansas. McLemore, 20, declared for the NBA draft on April 9.

Cobb provided travel itineraries and photos taken of he and Boyd on the trips, however, Boyd denied making the trips with Cobb.

Last month, McLemore said that he has had a relationship and a "bond" with Blackstock since January. Documents obtained by USA TODAY Sports via a public records request to the University of Kansas showed that Blackstock received complimentary admission as McLemore's guest to three Jayhawks home games during the 2012-13 season.

"Rodney Blackstock has been great," McLemore said in Chicago at the NBA Pre-Draft Combine. "Since Day One, since I met him, we have got that bond and communicating very well. And that is why I chose him to help me with this process."

On May 4, USA TODAY Sports reported that Blackstock received complimentary admission as McLemore's guest to Jayhawks home games on Feb. 2, 11 and March 4.

McLemore said that he was not aware that Cobb accepted money from Blackstock. And McLemore said he never accepted money, gifts or trips from Blackstock. Cobb said McLemore knew "little to none" about Blackstock's financial involvement in the player's life, nor did McLemore know that Cobb had accepted $10,000 from Blackstock.

A person who became close to Blackstock to help him build relationships with players and their families confirmed knowledge of Blackstock's payments to Cobb. The person who spoke to USA TODAY Sports on the condition of anonymity in order to avoid harming relationships with those involved.